Mixing and Mastering/Mixing With Pink Noise - Does it work?
Mixing With Pink Noise - Does it work?

Mixing With Pink Noise - Does it work?

In The Mix9 minAug 4, 2018
5 chapters
  • Introduction to Pink Noise Mixing(0'001'26)
    Pink noise mixing is a trending technique designed to help balance your mix before applying any processing like EQ, compression, reverb, or delay.
    Pink noise has an equal amount of energy in each octave, allowing you to match your tracks to it and achieve balanced levels across the frequency spectrum.
    Useful for engineers with 50-100 tracks who want to maintain fresh ears by avoiding prolonged listening to the mix itself while setting initial levels.
    • Use a tone generator set to -10-15 dB and send it to the master • Download a pink noise WAV file, drag it into your DAW, and loop it
  • How to Apply Pink Noise Technique(1'263'59)
    • Press play on pink noise and take all faders down • Raise each fader until you can hear the track through the noise • Lower it until it disappears under the pink noise • Mute the fader and move to the next one
    Some engineers prefer working in mono by summing the mix to mono on the master or using a mono summing tool, and most recommend ignoring reverbs and delays which should be set later by ear.
    Will demonstrate the technique in FL Studio using a pink noise WAV file and in Studio One using a tone generator with two different song styles.
    The goal is to achieve a nice balanced starting point for your mix before making any creative decisions.
  • Practical Results and Observations(3'595'19)
    Implementing the technique took 5-10 minutes per mix just to run through each fader, not including setup time for the WAV file or tone generator.
    Continuously hearing pink noise for ten minutes felt unpleasant and creative, with an unbalanced result where vocals fell off and drums felt out of place.
    A better static mix could have been achieved in 2-3 minutes by manually setting levels without the pink noise reference, despite expecting better results from the technique.
    The claimed one-minute technique took significantly longer in practice, and other videos showed the same extended timeframes, contradicting marketing claims.
  • Critical Analysis and Flaws(5'198'33)
    The technique requires all elements to be recorded and produced well; if tracks have frequency spikes, using pink noise as reference won't correctly balance them.
    A bass drum with a spike at 2K might show as balanced to pink noise when only the top end matches the reference, while the bass sits far below it.
    The technique misses the bigger picture of developing essential engineering skills like quickly balancing, dialing in tones, routing correctly, and working in real-time situations.
    In live sessions with clients present, using pink noise would appear unprofessional and kill the creative vibe; experienced engineers develop level-setting ability over months and years.
  • Final Verdict and Recommendation(8'339'47)
    The technique only takes you a tiny portion of the way to a finished mix; if you need pink noise to reach a barely acceptable level, you could likely achieve it without pink noise in just a few moments.
    • Develop trust in your ears over time • Listen to well-balanced music you enjoy • Be critical of your mixes • Mixing many songs will naturally develop your sense of balance
    The author recommends trying the technique yourself and welcomes suggestions from those who have found effective ways to use it or have specific success stories.
    For the author, relying on ears and experience through many mixes is more valuable than the pink noise technique, though the exploration opened eyes to different ways of thinking about balancing and levels.